Friday, June 19, 2026

Henry Farny: Varied European Studies

"The Ford" by Henry Farny
"In September of 1867, Henry Farney left New York for Italy where he hoped to study painting under the protection of Thomas Buchanan Read and the sculptor, Randolf Rogers. Arriving on November 9 in Rome he went to live with Read. He seemed pleased with his first months there, working as both secretary and studio assistant to the older artist. During this time, he drew at night and also worked on paintings of his own. In Rome, he met a number of French students as well as Americans.

But soon Farny was chafing under Read's tutelage. He was assisting Read with his compositions by drawing details in preparatory sketches, but was not yet allowed to help with Read's paintings. Their relationship seems to have deteriorated, and the older artist had placed him with Hermann Herzog, a landscapist working in Germany. Farny complained to his mother:

'I wish to become a painter of figures and specially to study portraits (as a very profitable thing) and here this caprice takes Mr. Read to put me with a landscapist. It is as if one put a young man who wished to become a priest with a lawyer. None the less, I work hard, for to know how to paint a landscape is at least something.'

His lack of interest in landscape painting was ironic, since perhaps Farny's greatest achievement as an artist, was his depiction of the American West. Also, his comments show that his interest in art was a professional one. He wished to earn a living and the particular branch of painting that seemed to be most lucrative was the one he wished to pursue. 

While in Düsseldorf, Farny received an encouraging visit from Albert Bierstadt, a renowned American painter of western landscapes. Bierstadt advised Farny to continue his studies for another year, while praising his rapid progress and predicting great success for him. Bierstadt suggested that after Farny completed his studies they should visit the Rocky Mountains. 

By November of 1868 he moved to Strasbourg where he intended to stay several months to study under a Mr. Schuler. Farny's aunt died that same month, leaving 1,200 francs to his family. Apparently, he was able to use this bequest to finance another two years of European study and travel. We don't know the cities he lived in or who he studied with during this time, but one drawing is inscribed Düsseldorf and dated January 12, 1870, so it's possible he may have spent those two years there." 

To be continued

(Excerpts from "Henry Farny" by Denny Carter.)

 

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